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The village of Barnes Corner, New York, 80 miles north of Syracuse on Lake Ontario, had reported 65.5 inches of snow as of Monday morning, while Fort Drum to the north had 63 inches.
The first major lake effect snow pounded portions of the Northeast and Midwest this past weekend, with more in the forecast in the coming days. On Saturday, parts of the New York thruway had been ...
Some areas along the I-95 corridor, like Washington, D.C., and New York City, saw anywhere from a quick coating to an inch of snow Tuesday, while parts of northern New England got 2 to 6 inches of ...
On December 21, a winter storm formed in the Rocky Mountains, triggering record temperature drops in the region. [2] Early on December 23, the storm reached New York. Across the Buffalo metropolitan area, the difference between the water temperature and air temperature triggered lake-effect snow for several days. [3]
The November 13–21, 2014 North American winter storm (given the code name Knife by local governments [4] [5] and colloquially nicknamed Snovember [6]) was a potent winter storm and particularly severe lake-effect snowstorm that affected the United States, originating from the Pacific Northwest on November 13, which brought copious amounts of lake-effect snow to the Central US and New England ...
Despite the European model consistently forecasting 6 in (15 cm) of snow from the storm, the National Weather Service of New York City initially predicted just 1 in (2.5 cm). Not until the afternoon of the storm did they raise the forecast into the 2–5 in (5.1–12.7 cm) zone, which prompted a winter weather advisory to be issued. [4]
Let it snow in North and East US. Through Saturday evening, snowfall of 2 to 5 inches is expected to fall across northeast New Jersey, New York City, the Lower Hudson Valley, and parts of western ...
Meteorological winter got underway on Sunday, but wintry weather arrived several days prior in the Great Lakes amid a holiday weekend filled with travel-snarling whiteouts and feet of snow.